Union-busting Wisconsin group has its dollars in Colorado politics, according to two investigations

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Colorado labor and education are in the crosshairs of an anti-union Wisconsin foundation, according separate investigations by the Center for Media and Democracy and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation that supported the anti-union efforts in support of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (who grew up in Colorado Springs, coincidentally) are spreading their efforts nationwide, starting with Colorado and North Carolina.

There's nothing illegal or even uncommon about foundations supporting political and social messages, it should be pointed out.

The May 5 story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel cites documents collected by international hackers. The files showed the conservative foundation was intentionally following the playbook used by wealthy Democrats to make political inroads into Colorado a decade ago.

"Wealthy corporations and the organizations that serve them need to stop rigging our political system against hardworking people like the teachers who keep our public education system running," he said.

A May 8 report by Mary Bottari of the Center for Media and Democracy said the Bradley Foundation gave the Denver-based Independence Institute $1.45 million between 2004-2016 for such projects as supporting Republican efforts Douglas County school board to create vouchers for private and religious schools, which the courts later rejected, as well as opposing collective bargaining, tenure protections and payroll deductions for union dues.

Founded by progressive activist and writer John Stauber, the center tends to focus its investigations on corporate and politically conservative targets with little nuance.

It's no secret that the Independence Institute, the Denver-based libertarian-leaning think tank, takes on unions at every turn, and it depends on anonymous donors to do it.

"We never talk about our donors," Independence Institute president and CEO Jon Caldara said in an e-mail. "But if Bradley gave us that much money to fight unions, I'd be living on some small island with that cash right now instead."

The Journal Sentinel reported the foundation has given $575,000 to five groups in Colorado since last year.

"The records make clear the Bradley Foundation no longer simply favors groups promoting its signature issues: taxpayer-funded school choice and increased work requirements for welfare recipients," wrote reporter Daniel Bice. "It now regularly funds nonprofits that are, among other things, hostile to labor unions, skeptical of climate change or critical of the loosening of sexual mores in American culture."

"We're not going to let the Bradley Foundation or the groups they fund get us down," Gilchrist said. "More than ever, working people are coming together to raise wages, protect workers' rights, and expand the right to organize in Colorado. We will continue to shed a light on outside influence from anti-worker groups in local and state government. We must ensure Colorado politics places the priorities of Colorado working families first."